New Directions Radio: NDR Directory of Ham Radio and Information Selectivity

New Directions Radio shares news about the NDR directory of ham radio and choosing information selectivity from media when being inundated by too much information.

By the MOTHER EARTH NEWS Editors

| November/December 1982

Although the directory itself will cost some money, a listing in it—with your name, address, phone number, and (if you're a ham operator) call letters, plus up to 100 words of self-description—is free.

PHOTO: BEVERLY MILLS STETSON

The New Directions Radio column shares the latest on radio activities, including the NDR directory of ham radio and information selectivity.

Copthorne Macdonald is an amateur radio enthusiast, inventor of slow scan television, and founder of New Directions Radio. New Directions Radio article MOTHER EARTH NEWS NO. 78, November/December 1982.

Copthorne Macdonald: THE NDR DIRECTORY

A while back Harry Spetla (KA2DRE) suggested that we publish the NDR directory of ham radio: a directory of NDR hams and other folks who are sympathetic with the aims of New Directions Radio. Such a document could—for one thing—serve as a handy reference to our radio friends' names, addresses, and phone numbers. But beyond that, if the book included notes on each individual's interests and areas of competence, it would help people locate others with common concerns and/or with expertise in specific fields.

We've discussed the idea on the air, and a plan of action has begun to jell. Since demand for the booklet is likely to be high enough to require printing several hundred copies, we've decided that the project should be a nonprofit, volunteer, group endeavor. Perhaps if we spread the work out among a number of people, the guide will become a labor of love for many rather than one of drudgery for just a few.

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Harry is coordinating the job, managing the money, and—with the help of Bob Robinson (K1PRR)—handling production. Lee Branum (KL7IJG) is sending radio messages to people whose addresses we already have and who are likely to want to be listed in the directory. Meanwhile, I'll be taking on the editorial chores, typing the information into my computer and turning out the camera-ready copy to be printed.

Of course, we may well need more volunteers . . . particularly people who might be able to arrange local printing, or who are willing to help collate and staple pages or stamp and mail envelopes. And, naturally, we also need contributions to help cover our startup costs. We're not sure—at this point —just what the postpaid price of the book will be, but donations made to the New Directions Radio Directory Project will be credited (gratefully) toward your purchase of a copy. If you'd like to help in any way, send your check and/or offer of assistance to Harry Spetla, Dept. TMEN, Hoosick Falls, New York.

What I need from you folks, of course, is the information about yourselves that you'd like to have published in the guide. Although the directory itself will cost some money, a listing in it—with your name, address, phone number, and (if you're a ham operator) call letters, plus up to 100 words of self-description—is free.

Now what kind of information, exactly, should you include in your "blurb"? Well, you hams might begin with a statement of your station's capabilities (not necessarily a long list of equipment, but enough information to let other operators know what sort of on-air skeds are possible). Furthermore, you might mention your major interests . . . including the subjects you'd most like to discuss with others on the air. And finally, why not include a sentence or two on the kinds of help you're prepared to other to others, and any skills or information that you'd be willing to share.

Here's a strictly hypothetical listing, just to give you a better idea of the general format we're looking for:

Can operate QRP CW on 80-10 meter General Class frequencies. I like gardening, and experiment with non-chemical pest control. I'm also trying meditation and am interested in all paths to personal/spiritual growth. I work as a mechanical engineer and could help with solar collector design. Would also be glad to help others obtain their ham licenses.

Please do give a little time and thought to what you say in your listing. Try to include things that are really important to you—that get you excited—plus any other information that you think will be helpful to users of the guide. Also, do your best to keep your description within the 100-word limit . . . or I may have to take my editorial hedge clippers to it. And last but not least, send your listing to me as soon as possible—no later than Christmas—so that we can meet our deadline: We're going to try to get copies of the New Directions Radio Directory in the mail this spring!

RADIO INFORMATION SELECTIVITY

Are we all being inundated by too much information these days? Well, certainly the sheer volume of data available to us continues to grow all the time. And if you and I had to dig through the entire mass just to get to the relatively tiny percentage that we'd find of real value, we would be completely overwhelmed.

We hams face a similar problem . . . that is, the airwaves spectrum is crowded and becoming more so all the time. So we build filters into our receivers, to allow only the parts in which we're most interested to get through. We need effective filters in other areas of our lives too . . . so that we can tune in the most important items and sort out the informational QRM.

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Well, there are such filters . . . they're called good editors. No matter what your area of interest may be, there's likely to be at least one specialized journal that's staffed by people whose outlook and concerns are similar to yours. And subscribing to such a publication can be like having your own private crew of researchers working long hours to sort the informational raisins from the bran flakes, all just for you.

MOTHER EARTH NEWS is a good example of such a magazine. She brought us together, after all, and—for a small yearly fee—keeps feeding us lots of well-selected, well-edited articles on interesting subjects.

And since MOTHER's readers do seem to be a like-minded bunch, I thought I'd mention three other publications that I find valuable . . . and think you might, too.

The first two—Brain/Mind Bulletin and Leading Edge: A Bulletin of Social Transformation—are edited and published by Marilyn Ferguson, who is the author of The Aquarian Conspiracy.

Leading Edge Bulletin (Dept. TMEN, Los Angeles, California) reports new approaches to upgrading human culture in many areas—politics, relationships, business, education, and much more—with a focus on the people who are creating change in society. One fine recent article, for instance, discussed the ongoing peace movement within the U.S. military.

Each of these periodicals is published once every three weeks and costs $20 for a one-year (17-issue) subscription.

Another of my key sources of information is the Review of International Broadcasting . . . which helps bring order out of the multinational, multilingual chaos that shortwave listening can become. By distilling reports from many listeners, the publication spares us the chaff and leads us to the wheat. A one-year (12-issue) subscription is available for $15 from Glenn Hauser Dept. TMEN, Knoxville I Tennessee.

New Directions Radio is an international network of radio amateurs concerned with those ways of using ham radio (and related modes of communicating) that promote our own growth as individuals, and that we perceive as helping to create a more aware, more caring, and more responsible human society. We encourage all who share these interests to work with us. A current schedule of on-the-air activities is included in each issue of the bimonthly New Directions Roundtable Newsletter, published by Art Mourad (WB2POB) as a service to the rest of us. To subscribe, send 25 cents for each issue desired to Art Mourad, Dept. TMEN, Bergenfield, New Jersey.

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